Patricia Spottedcrow is one of the 51 inmates who came before the board in a Pre-Docket Investigation.

Spottedcrow is a mother of four with no prior felony convictions.

She has been a poster child for unfair sentencing laws in Oklahoma.

In 2010, Spottedcrow was charged with felony drug distribution for selling $30 of marajuana in Kingfisher; the judge sent her to prison for 12 years.

Earlier this year, the Pardon and Parole Board granted Spottedcrow parole on the condition that she spend 120 days in a community corrections facility.

The Governor signed off on the conditions of Spottedcrow's parole.

Spottedcrow's attorney, Laura Deskin, said there was absolutely nothing secretive about her parole process.

However, Spottedcrow found out last week that the terms of her parole were changed by the Pardon and Parole Board because of the ongoing controversy.

The Department of Corrections confirms Spottedcrow's offender status was changed to "Parole Recommendation withdrawn" last week.

Spottedcrow was in the middle of her 120 days when the Pardon and Parole Board made the abrupt change to her status, apparently causing her to be sent back to prison.

"Now she is just being jerked around by the system," Deskin said. "She was determined by the Pardon and Parole Board and the Governor to not be a danger to society."

Tuesday prison guards loaded up Spottedcrow and transferred her from Hillside Community Corrections in Oklahoma City back to Eddie Warrior State Prison in Taft because of the change in her parole status.

"So, to the Department of Corrections, she couldn't be in the general population," Deskin said. "Friday she was put in this lock-down facility where she was fed through a slot on a tray. Patricia did nothing wrong. It's just sad and it's unnecessary and I feel it's very cruel."

In another bizarre twist, Tuesday as Spottedcrow was being transported back to prison, her parole recommendation status changed again.